Circulation, Vol 64, 345-351, Copyright © 1981 by American Heart Association
AS Blaustein, WH Gaasch, D Adam and HJ Levine
Postextrasystolic (PES) relaxation of the left ventricle was studied in 24
anesthetized dogs using the time constant (tau) of the left ventricular
isovolumic pressure decline as an index of global relaxation velocity.
Using programmed atrial stimulation and a control RR interval of 500 msec,
the "coupling interval/compensatory pause" was varied from 400/600 msec to
250/750 msec, and left ventricular pressure- segment length data from
control beats were compared with data from PES beats. Contractile state and
fractional shortening increased in the PES beat, but the relaxation time
constant remained unchanged (control, 35 +/- 3 msec; PES at 250/750 msec,
36 +/- 3 msec) (p = NS). Pretreatment with propranolol did not
qualitatively influence these results. Isoproterenol and calcium were given
in doses sufficient to increase the time derivative of isovolumic pressure
(maximal positive dP/dt) by an amount equal to that obtained with PES
potentiation (approximately 50%); isoproterenol produced a substantial
decrease in the relaxation time constant (38 +/- 4 to 30 +/- 6 msec, p less
than 0.01), whereas calcium administration produced only a small decrease
in the time constant (30 +/- 5 to 27 +/- 5 msec, p less than 0.05). Thus,
in the intact dog heart, some positive inotropic interventions augment
contraction and speed relaxation, but PES potentiation of contraction is
not associated with a change in relaxation velocity.
ARTICLES
Myocardial relaxation. V. Postextrasystolic contraction-relaxation in the intact dog heart
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